Any unit of time will do - day, hour, year, etc. If you want to use SI units, use seconds.
Turnover per week, in million currency units per week.
For a week, it could be expressed in liters and tenths of liters. In the English units, quarts or pints would be used, or (for smaller amounts) fluid ounces.
second, minute, hour, day, week, fortnight, month, year, decade, century, millennium.
"Liter" is a unit of volume. "Millimeter" is a unit of length. If units of volume and length could be converted to each other, then you'd be able to calculate how many inches of gas you put in your car last week, and how many pints tall you are.
Zero. Kilometers measure distance. Liters measure volume. They cannot be converted. If you could convert volume to length, then it would be possible to figure out how many yards of gas you put in the car last week, and how many inches of milk you poured on your cereal this morning.
A semester hour typically means the amount of class contact hours in one week. For example, a three credit course would meet three hours per week through the length of the semester. A four credit course would meet four hours per week through the length of the semester.
The unit = 122/4 patients/week = 3.5 patient/week on average.
Centimeters measure length and grams measures mass (weight) therefore they can not be converted. It is like asking how many oranges are in a week.
Depends on the work out type , length in a day.
people
people
The length of one unit of time is not fixed, as it can vary depending on the context in which it is being used. For example, in the metric system, one unit of time could be a second, minute, hour, day, etc.